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Regulating Innovation in the Digital Age: A Demand-Centred Toolbox for the Data-Driven Economy [Pehme köide]

(Utrecht University, the Netherlands)
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This book examines the role, impact, and limitations of regulation as a tool for shaping innovative markets.

It contends that the current supply-centred approach is suboptimal in the context of digital innovation and proposes a blueprint for a more demand-conscious approach to regulation. The focus on the demand-side is prompted by the evolving role of consumers within the innovation process in the digital and data-driven economy, the regulatory implications of which are underexplored in legal scholarship.

The book features in-depth case studies of the most recent regulatory initiatives in the EU, including Open Banking, the Digital Markets Act (DMA), and the AI Act. It dismantles innovative regulatory instruments, and critically examines their underlying assumptions from an innovation perspective. The new demand-based approach informs the design and use of supply-side market-centred tools, behaviourally-informed demand-side instruments, and technological regulation, by introducing a coherent set of demand-centred considerations.

The book offers a regulatory toolbox recalibrated for the digital age and serves as a practical guide for academics, policymakers, regulators, and legal practitioners seeking to understand and engage with the regulation of innovative markets.



Examines the role, impact, and limitations of regulation as a tool for shaping innovative markets.

Muu info

Examines the role, impact, and limitations of regulation as a tool for shaping innovative markets.
Introduction

Part I: Demand-centred Regulation of Innovation
1. Demand-side Paradigm for Regulating Innovation
2. Three Tales of Regulatory Intervention with Technological Innovation in
the EU

Part II: Recalibrating the Regulatory Toolbox
3. Market-centred (Co)regulation and Demand-side Obstacles to Innovation
4. Behaviourally-informed Regulation: Its Potential and Limitations
5. Technological Regulation and Demand-driven Innovation

Conclusions
Nikita Divissenko is Assistant Professor at the School of Law, Utrecht University, the Netherlands.